Remove ads from site

Gandalf The White
12 January 2019 21:50:22


 


One encouraging feature of that mean chart is that it shows that pesky High to our SW as being a lot further away than on the operational run as well as being about 10 mb less intense.


Originally Posted by: jhall 


Yes, exactly.  Without going through the 50 permutations I'd guess that very few will have the high pressure in the same place as the Op.


The polar vortex being split almost into three chunks is also notable.


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


Polar Low
12 January 2019 21:55:40

Taken from NW Peter


ECM ensembles watch


Looking at members with 850Hpa of minus 5 or below for large parts of the UK:


D11 36 yes, 15 no


D13 36 yes, 15 no (though different runs)


D15 36 yes, 15 no (again, some different runs)


Still remarkable consistency for cold for such a long way out


Edit: forgot to mention, probably half of the runs which failed to show minus 5 uppers at the precise time had very cold air very close by, either leaving or about to come in. 


 



 


Yes, exactly.  Without going through the 50 permutations I'd guess that very few will have the high pressure in the same place as the Op.


The polar vortex being split almost into three chunks is also notable.


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 

RobN
  • RobN
  • Advanced Member
12 January 2019 22:09:57


 


One encouraging feature of that mean chart is that it shows that pesky High to our SW as being a lot further away than on the operational run as well as being about 10 mb less intense.


Originally Posted by: jhall 


ECM mean is encouragingly similar to GFSP which forces the AH to take a much needed holiday SW of the Azores - let's hope it's a long holiday.


Rob
In the flatlands of South Cambridgeshire 15m ASL.
Deep Powder
12 January 2019 22:13:22


 


Just shared two bottles of wine with a friend - waiting for the cold is like Waiting for Godot. 


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


I always find my friend Jackie D and Irn Bru, is much better for a spot of positive model watching.😉😛


Mentions of similarities with Jan 2013 on here over past few days, that would suit me fine (IMBY). Whatever the outcome, these are very interesting Synoptics, which are not our usual winter fare. I get the feeling the vortex almost wants to dive down right over us, if only, but you never know. 


Near Leatherhead 100masl (currently living in China since September 2019)
Loving the weather whatever it brings, snow, rain, wind, sun, heat, all great!
Gandalf The White
12 January 2019 22:35:11


Taken from NW Peter


ECM ensembles watch


Looking at members with 850Hpa of minus 5 or below for large parts of the UK:


D11 36 yes, 15 no


D13 36 yes, 15 no (though different runs)


D15 36 yes, 15 no (again, some different runs)


Still remarkable consistency for cold for such a long way out


Edit: forgot to mention, probably half of the runs which failed to show minus 5 uppers at the precise time had very cold air very close by, either leaving or about to come in. 


 


 


Originally Posted by: Polar Low 


Thanks, that's good to know.  At that range 70/30 is a decent signal, particularly if part of the 30% is just about timing.


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


Gooner
12 January 2019 22:45:26

This winter says no for the UK. Sorry, but it increasingly looks as though the recent SSW is not going to deliver anything of note for us as usual for the UK mid-winter and Conus is goi going to get the cold and snow which we crave. Sorry guys!

Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


Your drunk …………….clearly Hic! 


Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun



Marcus
Banbury
North Oxfordshire
378 feet A S L


Shropshire
12 January 2019 22:48:17


 


Just shared two bottles of wine with a friend - waiting for the cold is like Waiting for Godot. 


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


Tuesday's coming Richard, there's no getting away from it 


From December 27th 2020, zonality will be banned from mixing with the UK. We appreciate that this may come as a shock to younger people and old Uncle Barty. This ban will last for a minimum of ten days.
Arbroath 1320
12 January 2019 22:57:05

Well the GFS 18z pub run is a bit of a damp squib. Follows the ECM 12z op to t240 to a degree with the Azores High exerting itself, but the run closes with no immediate route to prolonged cold. 


One run with all the usual caveats but this is beginning to look like jam tomorrow. Let's wait on the GFS P and the ensembles to see if the op has support.


GGTTH
tallyho_83
12 January 2019 22:58:54

18z Op run ends the cold spell before it's even started?

Here with a slice of you know what?



Home Location - Kellands Lane, Okehampton, Devon (200m ASL)
---------------------------------------
Sean Moon
Magical Moon
www.magical-moon.com


tallyho_83
12 January 2019 23:02:26


Well the GFS 18z pub run is a bit of a damp squib. Follows the ECM 12z op to t240 to a degree with the Azores High exerting itself, but the run closes with no immediate route to prolonged cold. 


One run with all the usual caveats but this is beginning to look like jam tomorrow. Let's wait on the GFS P and the ensembles to see if the op has support.


Originally Posted by: Arbroath 1320 


Yes how strange? maybe there is something wrong with these GFS models? and must be a reason why they can't get the cold persistently ? Para was showing us -10c isotherm at 850hpa with easterly followed by northerly on the 12z @ 384.


Home Location - Kellands Lane, Okehampton, Devon (200m ASL)
---------------------------------------
Sean Moon
Magical Moon
www.magical-moon.com


tallyho_83
12 January 2019 23:07:10

GEM shows midday temps widely below freezing and highs of -7c in Birmingham by 22nd:



 


 


Home Location - Kellands Lane, Okehampton, Devon (200m ASL)
---------------------------------------
Sean Moon
Magical Moon
www.magical-moon.com


Gandalf The White
12 January 2019 23:56:41


Well the GFS 18z pub run is a bit of a damp squib. Follows the ECM 12z op to t240 to a degree with the Azores High exerting itself, but the run closes with no immediate route to prolonged cold. 


One run with all the usual caveats but this is beginning to look like jam tomorrow. Let's wait on the GFS P and the ensembles to see if the op has support.


Originally Posted by: Arbroath 1320 


Whereas the GFS(P) maintains the theme of a chunk of the polar vortex dropping SSE with a mid-Atlantic ridge building



Roughly how the ECM 12z might have evolved.


 


 


 


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


Gandalf The White
13 January 2019 00:03:13

ECM 12z ensemble suite for London confirms that the Op was at the top of the mild cluster at Day 10.  Essentially little change, with a strong signal for cold/very cold conditions and some ice days amongst the perturbations. Still a few options producing milder conditions, but very much the minority at this stage.


 


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


tallyho_83
13 January 2019 00:09:12

Para 18z still has that Icelandic low pressure sinking southwards and then pulling in the easterly come 300hrs: Thus allows winds to turn easterly and HP to build to our north over Greenland & Iceland come +384 with daytime maxes barely getting above freezing and wind-chill combined with more persistent snow over eastern areas as the LP moves into the southern part of the North sea, come the end of the run @ +384! THE GFS 18z Para has a way more wintry and blocked ending compared with the GFS 18z Op run.









 


When will the GFS Op run follow the Parallel run and start being more consistent??


Home Location - Kellands Lane, Okehampton, Devon (200m ASL)
---------------------------------------
Sean Moon
Magical Moon
www.magical-moon.com


Chunky Pea
13 January 2019 00:09:19

Only a couple of weeks ago, the ECM op started showing the trend that HP would remain close by when the ENs continued to show otherwise, and was proved right in the end when the mean chart started backing away a couple of days later. Something to maybe keep in mind if the next few ECM runs show something similar to tonight's run. 


Current Conditions
https://t.ly/MEYqg 


"You don't have to know anything to have an opinion"
--Roger P, 12/Oct/2022
BJBlake
13 January 2019 00:11:34

The Town won today against all odds: I'm humming the Great Escape, so if the Town can win, the weather can verify cold - eventually! 


 


Can an anyone remember the roller coaster leading to the Beast? There was plenty of promise, followed by wrist slitting disappointment, followed by renewed optimism. This one is more uncertain true but it's the same roller coaster. 


I don't usually like the mean outputs. But right now they are a sanity check to the inconsistency. I think the UKMO is the one to watch with greater hope.


Brecklands, South Norfolk 28m ASL
tallyho_83
13 January 2019 00:21:13

18z ensembles chart  for London: -the OP run was a mild outlier:


 


Home Location - Kellands Lane, Okehampton, Devon (200m ASL)
---------------------------------------
Sean Moon
Magical Moon
www.magical-moon.com


Gandalf The White
13 January 2019 00:35:32


18z ensembles chart  for London: -the OP run was a mild outlier:


 


Originally Posted by: tallyho_83 


Tally, an outlier is a run without any support amongst the ensemble perturbations. The 18z was not in any way an outlier even towards the end.


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


Arbroath 1320
13 January 2019 00:37:06


 


Whereas the GFS(P) maintains the theme of a chunk of the polar vortex dropping SSE with a mid-Atlantic ridge building



Roughly how the ECM 12z might have evolved.


 


 


 


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


Yes and the 18z ens show the op to be in the milder cluster. Still strong signals for cold, but with the Azores High continuing to pose a threat it seems.


GGTTH
Arbroath 1320
13 January 2019 00:39:50

What will tomorrow's runs bring I wonder?


GGTTH
fairweather
13 January 2019 00:41:57


 


We would hardly be looking at late February by next weekend, which will be the 19th of January. Even if the GFS was to show a clear signal at 16 days out - which is unlikely - that would still only just take us into February. And in any case the GFS and ECM ensembles are already showing a pretty clear signal of -5C 850 mb temperatures from about 8 days out, which is not that far from the -7 that you say you want - especially when you bear in mind the point that Retron has made that the low pressure forecast to be over the UK in that timeframe means than that 850 mb level will be substantially closer to the surface than it would usually be. That would pretty much make -5 equivalent to the -7 that you'd like to see.


Originally Posted by: jhall 


Maybe not put quite as I meant and late Feb is probably pushing it a bit John. I am saying that the uncertainty that is there now for 8-10 days should be resolved by next weekend if not before. If it isn't showing a consistent cold outlook and the cold isn't with us we will be starting to look at the first week of February onwards. That will be the last month of winter and the later it is the more special it will have to be to justify it as a cold second half to winter that has been widely predicted and more especially so since Christmas with the SSW event.


Whilst I personally think  there is enough evidence that it will be cold I think -5C 850's still might not make for severe cold and settling snow in  the South. I also do think that the mean is likely to fall to -7C though. 


This was and is not meant to be a "winters over" type post in any shape or form, just being a bit more measured. 


S.Essex, 42m ASL
David M Porter
13 January 2019 00:42:16


 


Yes and the 18z ens show the op to be in the milder cluster. Still strong signals for cold, but with the Azores High continuing to pose a threat it seems.


Originally Posted by: Arbroath 1320 


The current situation with the model output reminds me of last February in a lot of ways as there was a lot of variation back then among the various operational runs before the models all came into line wrt the arrival of the Beast. My own feeling is that at the moment, the models are quite possibly still getting fully to grips with the effects in the troposphere of the SSW which took place over the festive season and they may not have this fully worked out yet.


Tomorrow's model runs will make for interesting viewing I suspect.


Lenzie, Glasgow

"Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us has a monopoly on wisdom, and we must always be ready to listen and respect other points of view."- Queen Elizabeth II 1926-2022
Arbroath 1320
13 January 2019 00:47:58


 


The current situation with the model output reminds me of last February in a lot of ways as there was a lot of variation back then among the various operational runs before the models all came into line wrt the arrival of the Beast. My own feeling is that at the moment, the models are quite possibly still getting fully to grips with the effects in the troposphere of the SSW which took place over the festive season and they may not have this fully worked out yet.


Tomorrow's model runs will make for interesting viewing I suspect.


Originally Posted by: David M Porter 


Very likely David.


GGTTH
Retron
13 January 2019 04:42:37
No great change to the overall outlook yesterday evening, I see! The GFS(P) 18z yet again plastered the UK in snow, it was very consistent yesterday.

The ECM strat charts:

https://www.geo.fu-berlin.de/en/met/ag/strat/produkte/winterdiagnostics/index.html 

haven't changed much since Friday either. The SSW is still ongoing and is forecast to end on the 20th - the best part of three weeks after it started. It's shown to affect 30hPa, but 50hPa doesn't quite go negative on this run... the vortex is well and truly split, however.

The ECM ensemble means last night show a decent-sized cluster, perhaps even a majority cluster, for a low pressure, accompanied by a chunk of the polar vortex, to cross the UK. Now, where have we seen that before? Oh yes, the GFS(P)!

As has been mentioned in passing from the NW post, the ECM was a very cold suite last night with the majority cluster on the cold side. You can see this via the 10th/90th percentile charts quite nicely - there's more scatter on the warm side than the cold side:

https://weather.us/forecast/2639577-reading/ensemble/euro/temperatur850 

With ECM mean maxima for London pretty much matching the GEFS in the 10 day+ time frame, i.e. 2 or 3C, the signals for a noteworthy cold spell are the strongest they've been this winter. Another exciting day of model-watching beckons!
Leysdown, north Kent
Retron
13 January 2019 06:02:17
A different parallel this morning, with the "bit of the vortex" heading east instead. Much of Scotland and northern England still gets hammered with snow, but for the southern and SE folks it's a series of slushy coverings instead of one big dump.

It's interesting though that even outside the deep upper low, on the "warm" side of it, it's still cold enough for snow at times.


Leysdown, north Kent

Remove ads from site

Ads